A branch of the Indo-European languages that (judging from inscriptions and place names) was spread widely over Europe in the pre-Christian era.
Sinònims
Examples for "Celtic"
Examples for "Celtic"
1He is correct in that its origin is the Celtic New Year.
2I was asked to deliver a talk for Celtic on Sunday morning.
3The stone, in truth, seems the natural symbol of the Celtic races.
4It will mention the EU Constitution, the North and the Celtic Tiger.
5And in that field-it is quite small-is a Celtic cross that says:
1In what parts of the British Isles are Celtic languages still spoken?
2Scatty sighed and muttered something in an ancient Celtic language.
3The word "gars" pronounced "ga" is a relic of the Celtic language.
4The descendants of the old Celtic peoples have not kept up the Celtic languages to any great extent.
5Even to-day a variety of the old Celtic language, called Cymric, is still spoken by the Welsh people.
6Oxley shouted, or chanted, it's hard to tell with these Celtic languages, another phrase and again Lady Ty translated.
7The Bill will determine the future of broadcasting for Celtic languages in Britain and Northern Ireland for the foreseeable future.
8So Celtic art can give the impression of being the artistic expression of all the peoples speaking the Celtic language.
9Celtic language in Gaul and Britain, 14, 26.
10The Celtic languages are dying out, but they have left us something which will last so long as our literature lasts.
11Gussmann's Celtic languages programme survives at the Catholic University of Lublin to this day, partly funded by the Department of Foreign Affairs.
12It is much more difficult for an English speaker to learn a Celtic language than a linguistically closer language like Spanish or Swedish.
13They resembled the Britons in speaking a Celtic tongue; but it was a Gaelic and not a Cymric form of the Celtic language.
14There was found, for instance, at Vaison in the Vocontian canton an inscription written in the Celtic language with the ordinary Greek alphabet.
15As Wilamowitz reminds us, it was the Roman legions, not Virgil and Horace, that stamped out the Celtic languages and romanised Western Europe.
16"Birdmen," Scathach muttered, and then added a curse in the ancient Celtic language of her youth.
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Translations for celtic language